Excellent. I'm assigning the case to a cluster/storage engineer here in North 
America. We'll be in contact through the ticket shortly.

You mount the GFS2 filesystem just as any other filesystem:
$ mount /dev/<device with GFS2 on it> /<some mount point>

example:
$ mount /dev/mapper/mpath1p1 /mnt/gfs2

The caveats are:
- The cluster stack must be operational
- There must be a free journal for the mounting node to work with

Thanks,
Adam

On Feb 13, 2012, at 9:33 AM, emmanuel segura wrote:

> How do you mount the gfs2 filesystem?
> 
> 2012/2/13 Laszlo Beres <las...@beres.me>
> On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 3:15 PM, Steven Whitehouse <swhit...@redhat.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> > It is still worth talking to our support team, since they may well be
> > able to suggest things to look into, or may have solved a similar
> > problem. They are there to assist even if you don't actually have a bug
> > as such to report.
> 
> Thanks for your feedback, I'm raising a support case right now.
> 
> > Do you have any backup scripts running and/or any other cron jobs which
> > might touch the GFS2 filesystem at certain times? That is usually the
> > first thing to look into,
> 
> No, as I mentioned no cron jobs are scheduled and we don't have backup
> on this system either.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Laszlo
> 
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--
Adam Drew
Software Maintenance Engineer
Support Engineering Group
Red Hat, Inc.
Desk: (919) 754-4126
Cell: (919) 389-5334





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